From Rivers to Oceans and Back: Linking Models to Encompass the Full Salmon Life Cycle
Abstract
Pacific salmon are a promising study subject for investigating the linkages between freshwater and coastal ocean ecosystems. Salmon use a wide range of habitats throughout their life cycle as they move with water from mountain streams, mainstem rivers, estuaries, bays, and coastal oceans, with adult fish swimming back through the same migration route they took as juveniles. Conditions in one habitat can have growth and survival consequences that manifest in the following habitat, so is key that full life cycle models are used to further our understanding salmon population dynamics. Given the wide range of habitats and potential stressors, this approach requires the coordination of a multidisciplinary suite of physical and biological models, including climate, hydrologic, hydraulic, food web, circulation, bioenergetic, and ecosystem models. Here we present current approaches to linking physical and biological models that capture the foundational drivers for salmon in complex and dynamic systems.
- Publication:
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American Geophysical Union, Ocean Sciences Meeting
- Pub Date:
- February 2016
- Bibcode:
- 2016AGUOSEC54C1339D
- Keywords:
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- 1622 Earth system modeling;
- GLOBAL CHANGEDE: 1655 Water cycles;
- GLOBAL CHANGEDE: 4845 Nutrients and nutrient cycling;
- OCEANOGRAPHY: BIOLOGICAL AND CHEMICALDE: 4217 Coastal processes;
- OCEANOGRAPHY: GENERAL